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Mark Tuahmen
3rd April 2020, 08:10
I wonder what will happen to Easter Bunny in this year 2020 and what will happen to all the children who love to be treated by Easter Bunny? Who will remember them? My own two little girls have asked daddy if he is still to come and I explain to them some countries will let him in and others maybe not. But he would come to Sweden and we would have egg hunting again like always and they would receive their Easter gifts! To which hearing they cried! Although Easter Bunny is not so popular in parts of Sweden as other countries, we celebrate here at home because my children have enjoyed his gifts when we traveled. We have this time lots of wagtails singing and we dress the girls up as witches and go wishing people happy Easter and sometimes receive sweets and we do painting eggs fine colours and patterns and decorate birch trees with feathers we collect together and enjoy Easter bonfire in forest on my fathers land - for scaring witches! Schnapps, Påskmust, Salmon and Lamb make good hearty meal for celebration time! Lots of different ways to celebrate!

Happy Påsk (pohsk) !

Will Easter Bunny and Easter come to your country for your children? :confused::sun:

EFO
3rd April 2020, 12:13
Not being a believer,but still Paste Fericit!

https://i2.wp.com/metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/easter-memes-5.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&zoom=1&resize=480%2C614&ssl=1

Sarah Rainsong
3rd April 2020, 12:52
How interesting! I've never heard of dressing up as witches or decorating birch trees with feathers in relation to celebrating Easter. Here, it's mostly egg hunts and Easter bunny, and any egg hunt beyond just a small family one will most likely be using plastic, candy-filled eggs. I rather like the way you described celebrating Easter.

We have never presented the Easter Bunny or Santa Claus as real. They've always been fun, imaginative play. (Closest was the Tooth Fairy, who was married to Santa Clause. That caused some little heads to spin for a quick minute.) Our own Easter celebrations have involved new clothes for church in the morning, followed by a special Easter dinner, an afternoon egg hunt, and dessert for supper. This year will be different. No new clothes. No church. And I'm not sure if we'll get our normal Easter menu. But I don't think that Easter being in two Sundays has really registered with most of my crew. Except my youngest (9), who has asked about egg hunt. I promised him we'd still have an egg hunt.